- imppiiJuii.u.ipji-M
''TWmjHr"!" W "
;
TALK ABOUT TALKING.
YOU CAN TALK TO TJIOU
SANDS OF PEOPLE EVERY
DAY BY PUTTING YOUR
'WANT ADS" IN THE
TUIES.
KEEP UP TO DATE
BY READING THE COOS
BAY TIMES. THE DAY'S
NEWS TOLD ACCURATELY!
AND CONCISELY.
M
MEMBER OP ASSOCIATED PRKSS.
VoL III.
, THE DAILY CiJOS BAY TIMES, MARSHFIELD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 18 1908.
No. 111.
m
ttnra
i
WILL EXCLUDE CURIOUS CROWD
FROM RIJEF TRIAL HENCEFORTH
Precaution Taken to Prevent
Duplication of Heney
Tragedy.
ANYONE DESIRED
TO BE ADMITTED
Jury Instructed to Disregard
Last Friday's Shooting In
Decision.
-
(By Associated Press.)
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 18.
Heney's condition continues
satisfactory to his physicians.
He rested well last night and is
making rapid physical gains.
fBy Associated Press.)
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 18.
Judge Lawlor today issued instruc
tions that any and every person Ruef
or his counsel desired in the court
room should be admitted. The court
also admonished the jury that it
must utterly disregard Friday's
shooting and conilne its delibera
tions solely to the evidence in the
case.
Owing to the Heney shooting and
the threats made yesterday againbt
Ruef, no one will be admitted to
the court room during the hearing
except those who can give a good ac- street improvements. Many are de
count of themselves. Unguent and the contractors who
have completed the Jobs are calling
(By Associated Press.) loudly for their pay. Marshal Car-
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. IS The ter and Recorder Upion were in
trial of Abraham Ruef was resumed . structed to give all delinquents ten
this morning. James L. Gallagher ,da'3 notlc0 that unless they settled
, , , , at once, the property would be ad-
formerly supervisor and agent of . , ,.,.,.
ivertised for sale. In the future, the
Ruef In the alleged bribery trans- councll proposes to collect assess
actions was on the stand. The de- ments before the work Is finished
fense cross-examined Gallagher at so that there will, be no trouble on
length and their methods aroused thIs score
several clashes with the attorneys Last evening, the council ordered
... ,, , , , . . . an alias warrant for the buy and sale
for the prosecution who objected to ... T t
of the Luse property on Second
questions asked the witnesses. A street for the assessment agalnst
strong force of police, and detectives it for the improvement.
were on duty in the court room,' The city also owes $82G.21 on the
corridors and In front of the build- Second 6treet improvement and it
ing. Only about two hundred per- was decided to issue a general fund
sons were permitted to have access warrant to the contractors, Masters
in the court room
Southwest Gale Rages ' Out-1
side Bar and Delays
Shipping,
STORM KEEPS
IIFSRFI S HFRF
IL.VIUL.ILM UL.1IL.
Owing to a terrific southerly or that lt wag "noting unusual for
BoutliNvM. gale which raged along SengBtncken to refuse to pay."
'the COftst last night and this morn- Counenmen Lockhart and Naslmrg
ing, the Alliance was unable to get wanted t0 try and makG Mr. Song
out last evening or this morning but stacken ,)ayt Marshal Carter ex
wlll probably cross out this after- nlaJned tho history of the case, and
noon. The Nann Smith is in the Jt Wftg reforred t0 Councilmen Lock
lower bay but will probably not ' hart and Flanagan to Investigate
cross out today.
Tho FIfield and Capastrano are
expected in today from San Fran-
Cisco. Doth will load with lumuei tno uroadway improvement assess
at the C. A. Smith mill. iment last evening, F. M. Friedburg
... i
-Tho M. F. Plant which was to
have sailed from San Francisco yes- ment agalnst tne triangle which he
terday for Coos Day did not get and otners own ftt tjle intersection of
away. A telegram to F. S. Dow 0regon and Broadway. Their hold
stated that she would sail today sure. lngg arQ not as lnrge as that ot tno
Among those who will sail fori Railway Reserve which has to bear
Portland on the Alliance are tll0,the other part of the cost of the
following:
Wm. Hutchison, P. RademacKer,
W. W. Wllkins and wife, Miss Pease,
Mrs. A. Cook, Miss May Cook, Mr.
Oleson, Wm. Marler, Antone Tho
mas, S. Louis, K. Hondrlckson, W.
Oleson and four steerage.
Among those who will sail from
North Dond on tho Alliance are
Mrs. W. B. Campbell, E. M. Ward,
Halllo Williams, Geo. Murphy, Mm.
E. F. Flltcroft. Emma Flitcrort, ur
Deishen, Tom Harris, W. W.
mons, F. Mickey, Russell Cook anu
H. Elmer.
CITY'S FUNDS
GETTING "SH?"
Council Has Difficulty In Pay
ing Municipal Bills Meet
ing Last Night.
With the "Current Expense Fund"
depleted and the warrants on the
general fund undesirable, the city
council Is having troubles of its
own satisfying creditors. Last
night, it was brought up by Captain
Reed who objected to being paid for
his work on the pontoons and ferry-
slip for the city in a general fund
warrant, saying that when he bid on
the work it was with the under-
Istanding that he should be paid in
cash. Finally it was decided to is
sue him a warrant on the Current
Expense fund which he will be able
to cash soon after January 1, when
the liquor licenses and other in
comes replenish that fund. What
the council will do towards satisfy
ing employes for their salaries for
this month has not been determined
yet.
To Hurry Collections.
,It was decided last evening to
compel property-owners to hasten
the payment of assessments for
& McLain, in payment of it.
Small Wants Money.
D. W. Small was present again
last evening to secure the $24.20
which is due him for filling and put
ting crushed rock on Front street a
year or so ago. The amount Is the
sum which Henry Sengstacken re
fuses to pay, claiming that he was
I uasccacu iuu iiiii, ivu. ouusiiiuutrii
paid $50 for the work in front of
the Garflold building and says that
was his equitable portion of the ex
pense. Mayor Straw to whom the
matter was referred for investiga
tion a week ago said that he had
Pt investigated it but that he knew
the money was due Mr. Small and
Iana renort at the next meeting.
FrJedbui'K Gets Reduction.
In equalizing the assessment of
gecured a reduction In the assess-
intersection and It was agreed to re-
duco Friedburg's by one-third and
add tho reduction to tho Railroad's
assessment. Tho cost of Improving
Broadway between Queen and Wash
ington is estimated at $8,C02.18 or
$2.94 per front foot.
Heplnuk North Front Street.
North Front street, over which
W. U, Douglas and Councilman Nas
burg clashed last week, was ordered
renlanked, The council awarded the
Cm-lcontract for filling tho street to D.
vsws-ww"-
(Continued on page 4.)
COOS BAY NOT
Not Included In Engineer's Es
timate For River and Harbor
Improvement During Next
Fiscal Year.
(By Associated Press.
WASHINGTON, D. C, Nov. 18.
Among the Improvements of rivers
and harbors for which estimate is
Noted Oil Magnate Goes On
Witness Stand In New
York.
(By Associated Press.)
NEW YORK, Nov. 18. John D.
Rockefeller will go on the witness
stand this afternoon In the govern
ment's suit to dissolve the Standard
OH Company of New Jersey.
Rockefeller when asked If coer
cive measures were applied in ac
quiring the stock of other oil com
panies in Ohio, replied, "None what
ever.'"' He continued, "For myself
I can say that the methods used al
ways were absolutely fair."
WILL BE LUCKY
IF MY LUND
Immense Balloon Starts From
London For Trip to.
Siberia.
(By Associated Press.)
LONDON, Nov. 18. The mam
moth balioon owned by the Daily
Graphic ascended this morning ana
will attempt to reach Siberia and
thus break the long distance rec
ord. The aeronauts are Mr. Gau
gron and Captain Maltland who art?
accompanied by a newspape'r man
named Turner. They plan to de
scend in Siberia on Friday.
Notre Dame Football Team
Will Not Make Western
Trip.
(By Associated Press.)
NOTRE DAME, Nov. 18. The
local athletic board has refused its
sanction to the proposed western
trip of the Notre Dame University
eleven to play the Multnomah Ath
letic Club in Portland and tho Wash
ington State College. Interference
of the schedule with the Christmas
examinations is the reason given by
the board for its action.
LARGE AL10NY
FOR IS.
New York Judge Allows Her
$25,000 Per Year Pending
Divorce Decision.
(By Associated Prpsj.)
"NEW YORK, Nov 18. Mrs. How
ard Gould was allowed $2D,0Q0 a
year alimony by Justice Bischoff in
tho Sup"remo Court today. This ali
mony was allowed pending tho deci
sion of Mrs. Gould's suit for divorce,
JOHN D. WILL
TELL STORY
INDIANA BOYS
CAN'T C01E
GOULD
ON TOE BUDGET
made for the next fiscal year by the
chief of engineers of the United Sta
tes are the following for Oregon
and Washington:
Columbia river $1,164,000.
Canal at Cascades on Columbia
river, $100,500.
Columbia and lower Willamette,
$200,000.
Mouth of Columbia, $450,000.
Grays Harbor, Wash., $100,000.
Puget Sound, $130,000
Fighting Craft Gather In Kobe
Harbor For Brilliant
Demonstration.
(By Associated Press.)
KOBE, Japan, Nov. 18. The
fighting craft of Japan comprising
110 vessels exclusive of the sub
marines, passed In review before the
Emperor today. The weather was
perfect and the occasion one long to
be remembered. Kobe was gorgeous
ly decorated and tonight the fleet
was brilliantly lighted, electric, lights
outlining each vessel as lt swung at
anchor In the harbor.
War Cloud Assumes Danger
ous Proportions and Por
tends Trouble.
(By Associated Press.')
VIENNA, Nov. 18. Advices from
Cettinje, the capltol of Montenegro,
declare that the telecranh line, be
tween Cettinje and Cattaro, tho sea-
port of Austria, has been cut and
that Montenegro has mounted guns
on tho slopes "dominating Cattaro.
Furthermore, Montenegro has occu
pied the Dug pass leading Into Her
zegovina with 8,000 troops.
ST. PIERRE TO
WADS
Colonial Government, to Ask
For Aid In Quelling
. Uprising. ..
(By Associated Trees.)
ST. JOHNS, N. F., Nov. 18. Ad
vices from St. Plerre-Mlquelon today
state that crowds continue to gather
In the streets and at tho governor's
house In spite of tho police Interfer
ence. Tho colonial omciais- cuspaicn
says they have decided to nsk the I
homo government to send French
warships to St. Pierre to assist in
keeping order.
St. Paul Railway Has No In
tention of Floating Big
Issue.
(By Associated Press.)
NEW YORK, Nov. IS. Denlnl
was made today by Roswoll Mlllor,
olmlrman of the boaid of directors
of tho St. Paul railway, of tho rumor
of Its Intention to morgo tho various
I companies in South Dakota, Monta
na, Idaho and Washington which aro
JAP EMPEROR
REVIEWS NAVY
INTNEGRO
. TROOPS OUT
BOND ISSUE
RU10R DENIED
CALIFORNIA YOUTH CONFESSES
TO KILLING
Physicians Can't Find a Cause
For Snake Like Perform
ance of W. W. Cake.
TRENTON, N. J., Nov. IS. As a
result of the announcement that
William U. Cake, a local man, was
shedding his skin like a snake, sev
eral prominent specialists from vari
ous parts of the country came to
Trenton and made a thorough ex
amination of the patient, but the
symptoms puzzled them ns much as
they have the local physicians.
For the twenty-eighth time in the
fifty-three years of his life Cake, who
1b a linoleum printer, is now shed
ding his skin. The skin is going
from him exactly like a snake, th
only difference being that a reptile
sheds its cultlcle periodically, while
Cake is likely to shed his skin at any
time. Specialists from New York
who examined the patient believe
that the skin he sheds frequently
would save the lives, of many pa
tients where It Is necessary to graft
cuticle in cases of severe burns, cuts
and the like. For this purpose It
Is now likely that Cake will be re
moved to Bellevue hospital, New
York City, where several patients
are facing death because of the un
willingness of persons to have their
skin grafted into that of the suffer
ers. Cake has several children, but
none of them Is afflicted by the dis
ease. The doctors say that the dis
ease Is not contagious.
Local physicians have made nu
merous attempts to cure Cake, but
their efforts 'have been of no avail.
The physicians here and elsewhere
agree only to the name of the dls
ease, which they term "Dermltosls
Exfollatlna."
Such a case Is only once recorded
In medicine and surgery. Although
the doctors agree upon the technical
term the cause and treatment of the
disease are puzzles. They realize
that In typhoid fever tho skin peels,
but cannot understand how a high
fever would take tho skin from the
patient In so many Instances.
When Ca"ko was a child his moth
er, ho declares, told him his skin
used In the same way. The symp
toms are first a chill, followed by
severe pains In the stomach and
later by an extremely high fever.
Whlthln two weeks of an attack
every particle of skin on Cake's body
comes off. During this time he suf
fers intensely, particularly from an
itching sensation.
Although Cake lived for nine
years without shedding his skin tho
attack usually comes on every two
or three years. At one time he shed
his skin three times In fourteon
weeks. This was duo to tho use of
medicine, prescribed for him by a
physician for his stomach condition.
The specialists believe that his
skin is of such a tender nature that
it would peel with the slightest Irri
tation, and they declare that a man
with hiB tendency of weakness In the
cuticle would save hundreds of Uvea
where It wus necessary to savo hu
man beings by tho grafting skin pro
cess, which has so lately becomo an
important part in medical science,
building tho St. Paul's extension to
tho Pacific and Issue bonds against
this new lino and Its equipment.
According to tho company's ofllclals
the now lino will bo opened and run
ning to Puget Sound for business
boforo July 1 next.
One pound of cork is ampjy suffi
cient to support a man of ordinary
size in tho wator.
To bo porfectly proportioned a
man should weigh twonty-olght
pounds to ovary foot of his height
Steamor BREAKWATER salts
from Coos Bay for Portland SAT
URD.YY, NOVEMBER 21, at 8 A. 51.
SKIN-SHEDDING
MAN PUZZLE
RIS GRANDFATHER
Mystery of Killing of Wm.
Reed Near Vineland Final
ly Solved.
WM. ZELLER GIVES
ROBBERY AS MOTIVE
Plotted With Two Others Slay
Relative to Secure
Money.
(By Associated Press.)
VINELAND, Cal., Nov. 18.
Walter Zeller, aged 19, and Clyno
Wheeler, a companion aged 40,
charged with the murder of Wm.
Read, tho grandfather of Zeller, last
Friday night have confessed. Zeller.
confessed to the plot and sought to
lay the commission of tho crime
upon Wheeler. Herbert Grlgg, 1!
years old, is implicated by tho con
fession but he disappeared from his
father's farm yesterday. Tho mo
tive was robbery. Read was mora
than 70 years and was quite wealthy,
lie was shot and beaten to death.
There Is reason to believe that the
boys secured about $1,500.
Navy Department Denies That
Philippine Squadron Will
Be Transferred.
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, D. C, Nov. 18.
The Navy Department says there is
absolutely no truth in tho reports
that the Philippine squadron is pre
paring to go to China ports. Long:
ago, the squadron was given in
structions to keep away from tho
battleshlp Meet and they will . not
meet at Manila. It is stated in event
of the 'Philippine squadron moving:
to China that thero will bo no mys
tory about it and any such order
will bo made public at once.
Well-Known Salmon Kincr
Seized With Serious Ner
vous Attack.
(Special to Tho Times.)
WEDDEHBURN, Nov. 18. R. D.
Hume, who is lying seriously ill at
his homo here had a sudden relapse
last night brought on by a severe
nervous attack. Dr. MIngus of
Marshfleld, wlio had been In at
tendance on Mr. Hume thought tho
patient's condition satisfactory and
loft for homo yesterday. He waa
reached at Port Orford and called
back. It Is not thought that tho re-
lapso Is- of a serious nature as It Is
chiefly a nervous attack. Dr. MIn
gus will probably remain until tho
latter part of the week.
DUVAL TO PHILIPPINES,
Will Succeed Mujw General Weston
In Command.
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, D. C, Nov. 18.
Major Gonoral W, H, Duval has been
selected to succeed Mojor Gonaral
John F. Weston in command of tho
troops in tho Philippines.
FRUIT CA1CIC Doliclous and
wholofconm at the Coos Bay Bake
ry. Como in and ask for a bamplo.
Stenmer BREAKWATKIt sails
from Cons Bay for Portland SAT
URDAY, NOVIOUIER 21, t 8 A, M.
ND FORCE TO
GO TO CHINA
R.D.HU1EUAS
A RELAPSE
m
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